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High-Intensity Exercise Mitigates Cardiovascular Deconditioning During Long-Duration Bed Rest

Head-down-tilt bed rest (HDT) mimics the changes in hemodynamics and autonomic cardiovascular control induced by weightlessness. However, the time course and reciprocal interplay of these adaptations, and the effective exercise protocol as a countermeasure need further clarification. The overarching...

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Autores principales: Maggioni, Martina A., Castiglioni, Paolo, Merati, Giampiero, Brauns, Katharina, Gunga, Hanns-Christian, Mendt, Stefan, Opatz, Oliver S., Rundfeldt, Lea C., Steinach, Mathias, Werner, Anika, Stahn, Alexander C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6252355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30510516
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.01553
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author Maggioni, Martina A.
Castiglioni, Paolo
Merati, Giampiero
Brauns, Katharina
Gunga, Hanns-Christian
Mendt, Stefan
Opatz, Oliver S.
Rundfeldt, Lea C.
Steinach, Mathias
Werner, Anika
Stahn, Alexander C.
author_facet Maggioni, Martina A.
Castiglioni, Paolo
Merati, Giampiero
Brauns, Katharina
Gunga, Hanns-Christian
Mendt, Stefan
Opatz, Oliver S.
Rundfeldt, Lea C.
Steinach, Mathias
Werner, Anika
Stahn, Alexander C.
author_sort Maggioni, Martina A.
collection PubMed
description Head-down-tilt bed rest (HDT) mimics the changes in hemodynamics and autonomic cardiovascular control induced by weightlessness. However, the time course and reciprocal interplay of these adaptations, and the effective exercise protocol as a countermeasure need further clarification. The overarching aim of this work (as part of a European Space Agency sponsored long-term bed rest study) was therefore to evaluate the time course of cardiovascular hemodynamics and autonomic control during prolonged HDT and to assess whether high-intensity, short-duration exercise could mitigate these effects. A total of n = 23 healthy, young, male participants were randomly allocated to two groups: training (TRAIN, n = 12) and non-training (CTRL, n = 11) before undergoing a 60-day HDT. The TRAIN group underwent a resistance training protocol using reactive jumps (5–6 times per week), whereas the CTRL group did not perform countermeasures. Finger blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), and stroke volume were collected beat-by-beat for 10 min in both sitting and supine positions 7 days before HDT (BDC−7) and 10 days after HDT (R+10), as well as on the 2nd (HDT2), 28th (HDT28), and 56th (HDT56) day of HDT. We investigated (1) the isolated effects of long-term HDT by comparing all the supine positions (including BDC−7 and R+10 at 0 degrees), and (2) the reactivity of the autonomic response before and after long-term HDT using a specific postural stimulus (i.e., supine vs. sitting). Two-factorial linear mixed models were used to assess the time course of HDT and the effect of the countermeasure. Starting from HDT28 onwards, HR increased (p < 0.02) and parasympathetic tone decreased exclusively in the CTRL group (p < 0.0001). Moreover, after 60-day HDT, CTRL participants showed significant impairments in increasing cardiac sympathovagal balance and controlling BP levels during postural shift (supine to sitting), whereas TRAIN participants did not. Results show that a 10-day recovery did not compensate for the cardiovascular and autonomic deconditioning following 60-day HDT. This has to be considered when designing rehabilitation programs—not only for astronauts but also in general public healthcare. High-intensity, short-duration exercise training effectively minimized these impairments and should therefore deserve consideration as a cardiovascular deconditioning countermeasure for spaceflight.
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spelling pubmed-62523552018-12-03 High-Intensity Exercise Mitigates Cardiovascular Deconditioning During Long-Duration Bed Rest Maggioni, Martina A. Castiglioni, Paolo Merati, Giampiero Brauns, Katharina Gunga, Hanns-Christian Mendt, Stefan Opatz, Oliver S. Rundfeldt, Lea C. Steinach, Mathias Werner, Anika Stahn, Alexander C. Front Physiol Physiology Head-down-tilt bed rest (HDT) mimics the changes in hemodynamics and autonomic cardiovascular control induced by weightlessness. However, the time course and reciprocal interplay of these adaptations, and the effective exercise protocol as a countermeasure need further clarification. The overarching aim of this work (as part of a European Space Agency sponsored long-term bed rest study) was therefore to evaluate the time course of cardiovascular hemodynamics and autonomic control during prolonged HDT and to assess whether high-intensity, short-duration exercise could mitigate these effects. A total of n = 23 healthy, young, male participants were randomly allocated to two groups: training (TRAIN, n = 12) and non-training (CTRL, n = 11) before undergoing a 60-day HDT. The TRAIN group underwent a resistance training protocol using reactive jumps (5–6 times per week), whereas the CTRL group did not perform countermeasures. Finger blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), and stroke volume were collected beat-by-beat for 10 min in both sitting and supine positions 7 days before HDT (BDC−7) and 10 days after HDT (R+10), as well as on the 2nd (HDT2), 28th (HDT28), and 56th (HDT56) day of HDT. We investigated (1) the isolated effects of long-term HDT by comparing all the supine positions (including BDC−7 and R+10 at 0 degrees), and (2) the reactivity of the autonomic response before and after long-term HDT using a specific postural stimulus (i.e., supine vs. sitting). Two-factorial linear mixed models were used to assess the time course of HDT and the effect of the countermeasure. Starting from HDT28 onwards, HR increased (p < 0.02) and parasympathetic tone decreased exclusively in the CTRL group (p < 0.0001). Moreover, after 60-day HDT, CTRL participants showed significant impairments in increasing cardiac sympathovagal balance and controlling BP levels during postural shift (supine to sitting), whereas TRAIN participants did not. Results show that a 10-day recovery did not compensate for the cardiovascular and autonomic deconditioning following 60-day HDT. This has to be considered when designing rehabilitation programs—not only for astronauts but also in general public healthcare. High-intensity, short-duration exercise training effectively minimized these impairments and should therefore deserve consideration as a cardiovascular deconditioning countermeasure for spaceflight. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-11-19 /pmc/articles/PMC6252355/ /pubmed/30510516 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.01553 Text en Copyright © 2018 Maggioni, Castiglioni, Merati, Brauns, Gunga, Mendt, Opatz, Rundfeldt, Steinach, Werner and Stahn. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Maggioni, Martina A.
Castiglioni, Paolo
Merati, Giampiero
Brauns, Katharina
Gunga, Hanns-Christian
Mendt, Stefan
Opatz, Oliver S.
Rundfeldt, Lea C.
Steinach, Mathias
Werner, Anika
Stahn, Alexander C.
High-Intensity Exercise Mitigates Cardiovascular Deconditioning During Long-Duration Bed Rest
title High-Intensity Exercise Mitigates Cardiovascular Deconditioning During Long-Duration Bed Rest
title_full High-Intensity Exercise Mitigates Cardiovascular Deconditioning During Long-Duration Bed Rest
title_fullStr High-Intensity Exercise Mitigates Cardiovascular Deconditioning During Long-Duration Bed Rest
title_full_unstemmed High-Intensity Exercise Mitigates Cardiovascular Deconditioning During Long-Duration Bed Rest
title_short High-Intensity Exercise Mitigates Cardiovascular Deconditioning During Long-Duration Bed Rest
title_sort high-intensity exercise mitigates cardiovascular deconditioning during long-duration bed rest
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6252355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30510516
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.01553
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